A draconian long range strike: Israel's attempt to smash the Iranian nuclear program.

There is much debate these days about the ability of Israel to hit Iran’s nuclear program. Some analysts believe that it would be a draconian challenge to launch such a long range attack on the facilities used for the atomic program while others are much more optimistic. To such an extent there’s someone who firmly believes that 25 F-15Is, each carrying a single GBU-28, and about a dozen F-16Is with lighter weapons could be enough to achieve the goal.

I’m among those who think that it is not going to be an walk in the park. The problem is not only to penetrate Tehran’s airspace but execute concurrent air strikes on several ground targets.

There are about 30 nuclear facilities in Iran, six of those are believed to be primary targets for anyone willing to halt the Iranian nuke ambitions.

Unless something really unbelievable happens (as, for instance, a southern circumnavigation or a northern trip with a stopover in Azerbaijan to enter Iran from the Caspian Sea or any other unexpected direction) there are only 3 possible routes to Iran: Northern (via Turkey), Central (via Jordan and Iraq) and Southern (via Saudi Arabia). Both require (more or less) a violation of sovereign airspaces as well as several supporting aircraft. AEW, EW, SEAD and many refueling planes.

The Israeli can almost do everything. But this is not a pre-emptive surprise strike. Unless the IAF is going to perform only a symbolic strike (that would be almost a suicide mission, considered the reaction it would spark) the one in Iran will be an extremely long range mission in which many fortified underground targets will have to be smashed along with other surrounding targets. Not static unprotected targets, but SAM sites, radars, and everything belonging to the Integrated Air Defense System that will try to repel the attacking force.

Unlike previous attacks on Iraq and Syria, that came almost unexpected, Iran is probably on heightnet alert status: with several geographically dispersed targets, the surprise factor would be quickly mitigated and IAF planes would have to deal with anti-aircraft threats and IRIAF fighter planes flying sort-of isolated air defense missions.

Furthermore, few analysts have taken Iran’s military capability into account. Even if the current Islamic Republic of Iran Air Force is mainly flying on vintage American and Russian “hardware” hardly maintained because of the international sanctions, it can still count on about 200 combat planes flown by proud pilots.

The Iranian fighters would not need to destroy many bombers. Disturb them in point-defense missions, let them spend some more fuel and make their long strike missions longer and more risky, would be enough.

Obviously, the scenario changes when/if air superiority is established and subsequent missions can be launched to look after individual targets in a battlefield freed of anti-aircraft threats. But this is something not going to be achieved very fast.

Summing up, if we consider that in 2007 air strike in Syria (isolated target caught by surprise) the Israelis employed ten planes to attack surface targets, I think that in Iran each target will require some 12-15 planes (spares comprised). This means that 60 planes would be called into action to strike 6 priority targets. If some secondary sites should be attacked as well, the armada would be made of several packages for more than 100 planes.

Hence, it would not be an air strike, but a small scale much dangerous air campaign.

The objective of Israel policy is to drag America into another war, they’re having a lot of success at the moment.

Rocco Zaccardi

Thank you Tom.

Veng

When has Israel ever dragged America into a war? If I recall correctly, America nearly dragged Israel into a war with Iraq in 1991. Don’t be so selfish.

Rocco Z

Wrong.

Photoale

I think the main goal of Israel is to force in some way the USA to make the job, there are simply too many hardened nuclear facilities for the IAF capability. Destroying single surface targets (as Osiraq and the Syrian reactor were) is ok, but now we have a completey different situation. However, in my mind the real question is: why Israel or USA, with hundreds or thousands nuclear weapons in a launch-ready state, should be worried by the Iranian ambition to be a nuclear state? Do they are really thinking that Iran could launch an attack to Israel, only to be completely annihilated few minutes later (or before…)? As for the Iraq-Iran war, the first and the second Gulf war, real reason to counter Iran is Persian Gulf stability (western oil interests), not Israel’s safety.

Veng

Considering Iran brutally oppresses its own people and make sremarks about “wiping [them] off the map” is suspected of trying to obtain nuclear weapons capability, then yeah, I think Israel is worried that they might actually be threatened by them, either directly by the Iran or the terror groups they sponsor.

They wouldn’t need a very large bomb to kill a lot of their citizens, just a surefire way to deliver and detonate it. Nor can Israel take the chance that Iran wouldn’t use the bomb. It’s simply too large of a threat.

Rocco Z

…and Israel occupies land of another people and kills with impunity and maintains an open air prison in Gaza…oh, and it has 400 nuclear weopons. The US, unfortunately, does Israel’s bidding..

huh?

A “draconian challenge”? That is the most bizarre use of the word “draconian” I have ever seen,

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